I don’t think anyone can really say what’s going to happen with console releases over the next 5 years. This “.5” update to PS4 and Xbox one X has already changed up that space enough to create some uncertainty.

If you’re very spoiler sensitive, might I suggest not browsing a subreddit avidly discussing the game and stop clicking on content related to the contents of the game? I don’t want the ending spoiled for me, but this is a bit far..

Learning has to start somewhere. I technically started playing piano when I was 4, when my parents bought me a toy keyboard. It was 8 keys tuned to c major that had numbers on every key and an instruction book on how to play songs like twinkle twinkle.

If my parents bought me a baby grand and paid for professional piano lessons instead, I probably wouldn’t have stuck with music for the last 22 years. The theory, technique, professional lessons and baby grand came evenetually. As I grew into them.

I now teach music at a junior high school (12-16 year olds) and you can bet your ass I start day 1 with the same open chords from that video along with some some tabbed out riffs. If I started throwing barre chords and advance technique at my students too early, they would hate it. Instead, they can play something they recognise within a few lessons, and it blows their little minds.

Obviously, the ones that stick with music as an elective class get the full treatment. But I honestly believe they’d never get there if they didn’t get the instant satisfaction of “music made easy”.

tl;dr: depends on the situation. Sometimes these tutorials give someone the instant satisfaction they need to get into music, and that’s okay.

Tips for trying to ollie on a longboard? I have an older LY tomahawk, it's obviously quite a bit bigger and heavier than a regular skateboard. Just want to be able to get up a kerb without stopping. Is the technique the same as a regular skateboard and I just need to get gud?